We'll Take the Lot: Wedge Brewing Co. in Asheville, NC
Work For Your Beer co-founders Alicia Valenski and Mel Fox take the lot at Wedge Brewing Co. in Asheville, NC.
We love trying every beer on the menu. Interested in us drinking your beer? Email cheers@workforyourbeer.com
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New Belgium Brewery - Asheville, North Carolina
Asheville, North Carolina claims the title of Craft Brewing Capital of North America. There are over fifty craft-brewing companies in the picturesque community located in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Western North Carolina. The New Belgium Brewing Company, one of the countries largest craft brewers, chose Asheville as the location for it's East Coast brewery which opened in early 2016. The company offers free guided tours with opportunities for beer tasting along the way. Located a mile from the heart of downtown Asheville and just across the French Broad River from the River Arts District and on River Greenway, the New Belgium Brewery has become a popular destination for tourists and locals.
The Happy Hour Guys in Asheville, Beer City USA - HHG #116
The Guys find themselves in the mountains of North Carolina, in a fantastic town that many people are calling Beer City USA. With 10 breweries servicing the beer needs of just 70,000 people as well as one of the finest beer retailers in on the planet, Asheville is an Eden of CRAFT in one of the prettiest places in our country. Tony Kiss of the Asheville Citizen-Times leads The Guys on a brief tour of the Craft Beer in Asheville which has become an important part of the Urban Renewal that keeps this town cool, creative and weird (in the best possible way). Enjoy!
Bev-Tour!
Beer City: How Asheville Became Beer City
Tony Kiss, the beer reporter, has been following the local craft brew scene since 1994. He traces the history of Asheville craft beer from the launch of Highland Brewing Company through this year's announcements that both New Belgium Brewing and Sierra Nevada Brewing will build east coast expansion breweries here and Oskar Blues Brewing will build an operation in Brevard. With 10 craft breweries already operating in Buncombe County, and smaller nano breweries continuing to come on line, Asheville is poised to become the east coast craft beer center of the United States.
NC Beer Guys Fire in the Triangle Gizmo Brew Works
Asheville Trip [2016]
Our trip to Asheville, NC in October 2016.
Places We Visited in the Video:
- 12 Bones Smokehouse 12bones.com
- Burial Beer Co. burialbeer.com
- A Bed of Roses: Bed and Breakfast abedofroses.com
- Chimney Rock State Park chimneyrockpark.com
- Wicked Weed Brewing wickedweedbrewing.com
- The Admiral theadmiralnc.com
- The Omni Grove Park Inn omnihotels.com
Music:
This Girl (Kungs Vs. Cookin' On 3 Burners)
Kungs, Cookin' On 3 Burners
River Arts District Tour (World Cafe Sense Of Place: Asheville N.C.)
Josh Copus, of the Clayspace Co-Op, takes David Dye on a walking tour of the River Arts District, for World Cafe's Sense of Place Asheville. Recorded on 2/24/16.
Hear the complete World Cafe Session here:
World Cafe npr.org/blogs/world-cafe/
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Explore Asheville: River Arts Tour
Video: Explore Asheville: River Arts Tour
Wicked Weed Bourbon Barrel Oblivion | TMOH - Beer Review #2161
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Brewery: Wicked Weed Brewing
Beer: Wicked Weed Bourbon Barrel Oblivion
Style: Sour/Wild Ale
Location: Brewed by Wicked Weed Brewing in Asheville, North Carolina, USA.
ABV: 10.5%
Rating: 97/100
Website:
Thank you for watching and enjoy your beer! :-)
BHTV: A Tour of the Asheville Art Museum
Beverly-Hanks & Associates, Realtors shows how you can Live the Life You Choose in Western North Carolina by visiting the Asheville Art Museum in the heart of downtown Asheville, North Carolina.
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BHTV: The Impact of Art Galleries in WNC:
- [Ann] We are so fortunate to live in a place that truly appreciates and supports the arts, and has such a creative spirit. As Georgia O'Keeffe said, I found I could say things in colors and shapes that I can say no other way. Things I have no words for. Today we are at the Asheville Art Museum to take an inside look and talk about their exciting new expansion. The museum is based in Asheville, but it's reach goes so much farther into Western North Carolina.
- [Pam] The museum collects American art of the 20th century, but we have a sub-focus on art of particular importance to Western North Carolina. So that if you're a visitor to the museum, or a resident of Western North Carolina, anytime you come you'll see work like this, by Josef Albers, who is a very important figure here, in the mid 20th century. And you'll also see work by other artists who've lived and worked here over the century. At the same time you'll see important works of American art from around the country that are internationally acclaimed as part of the American aesthetic development in this time period.
- [Pam] We have over 100,000 participants in our programs, and we have 12 or 15 exhibitions a year, and over 200 programs for people of all ages. Visitors come from all 50 states, from throughout 24 counties we serve in Western North Carolina, and from many, many places abroad.
- [Ann] We are with Kathleen Glass, the communications manager of the Asheville Art Museum. Kathleen, I know you just recently moved to Asheville from Macon, Georgia. What made you choose Asheville over anywhere else that you could have moved?
- Well as I mentioned to you earlier, with a background in arts administration I really wanted to find a great arts community and museum to be a part of in the southeast, and of all the places that I could've looked whether it was Atlanta, or Savannah, Asheville really stood out to me as a very unique community in that it's small, it has an incredibly thriving art scene, from your commercial galleries, to this wonderful museum that we have here. And the Asheville Art Museum is really unique in that it serves 24 counties, as the only visual arts, major visual arts institution in this entire region. So it's really more than just Asheville it's the entire region. So that was the major appeal for me.
- [Ann] You mention that the museum is only able to display about three percent of the permanent collection right now, and that the programming that you have is just filled to the brim. What is the expansion gonna enable you to do once that takes place?
- It's really exciting Ann, we're gonna be able to show probably two and a half times as much of the permanent collection at any given time, we're going to have changing exhibition spaces where we can bring in major traveling exhibitions or create our own. We're gonna have new spaces for public programming for kids, and for school groups, and for adult programs of all kinds, we're gonna have a new space for a film and video. Really, really exciting there will be a rooftop sculpture terrace, and cafe for that late in the day glass of wine looking at the mountains.
--LEARN MORE ABOUT LOCAL ARTS IN WNC--
No Hand Left Idle: Arts and Crafts in WNC
Using your hands is a notion embedded in the creative minds and curious spirits of craftspeople across the region.
Agents Answer: Where is the Best Place to See Original WNC Art?
If you’re not sure where to start your journey of discovery, our Beverly-Hanks agents are here to help. We asked them: Where is the best place for art in WNC?
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Nomading Art Studios in the hip River Arts District, Asheville NC
Oct 2015 - The Nomad Studio takes a 12 hour tour from Brooklyn to Asheville, setting up shop in the Phil Mechanic Studios for a 3 month residency in Ashville's Art Hot spot : the River Arts District. Watch a few paintings in progress, and check out some studios and the local scene.
Featured Music by:
Kusanagi by ODESZA
Insane by FLUME (feat. Moon Holiday)
RAD
Top 10 things to do in Asheville NC
RADical Change: The Economic Story of Asheville's River Arts District
Featuring Leah Mathews, Melissa Mahoney, Mary Stapleton, and Holly Fraser-Corp. Asheville’s once-industrial River Arts District (RAD) is now a thriving arts district with many artist studios, hip coffee shops and breweries, and a new greenway and residential buildings under construction. When tourist trolleys and studio stroll-ers abound, the influx of new economic realities influences the composition of artists making a living in the RAD as well as their production. This research presents an overview of the changes that have taken place in the RAD over the last few decades including an economic census of property ownership, artist representation, and other activities. We raise the question of whether this process has served to enhance resident, visitor, and/or artists’ quality of life, and whether the gentrification that draws visitors and new artist residents helps retain or redefine Asheville’s cultural identity.
Abandoned - Toys R Us
After much request, today I wanted to take a deeper look into the worlds most famous and iconic children's toy store that became a staple of millions childhoods, only to crumble in 2018. Lets take a look at Toys R Us.
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BrightSunFilms 2018
Alex Krug Combo - Crimson Lips
The Alex Krug Combo performs Crimson Lips live @ One Stop Deli in Asheville, NC Spring/Summer 2012
Blinkin'Pig 2012/2013
Concerns Over Sewer Levels
News 13 has obtained a letter revealing Oskar Blues new Brewery plant in Brevard owes $33,375 in unpaid fees for generating wastewater that could cause city pipes to fail. The fees are related to elevated water and sewage data figures from testing done over a six month period from January 2, 2013 to July 1, 2013.
We summarized the findings of the six-month monitoring period and showed that pre-treatment is required in this case, said Jay Johnston, Utility and Wastewater plant director for the City of Brevard. We issued a request for them to report back to us by September 30th.
The letter to Oskar Blues from the City of Brevard obtained by News 13 was mailed to Neal Price at Oskar Blues Brewery in Brevard over a month ago. The letter is dated August 2, 2013. A Brewery spokesperson told News 13, Price was on paternity leave but head brewer for the plant, Noah Tuttle, said he was not aware of any deadline to bring the plant into compliance for wastewater concerns.
It's the first of hearing of any deadline, said Tuttle. Tuttle also disputed the wastewater tests done by city officials. We have our own equipment that monitors what goes down the drain and our numbers did not match up, said Tuttle.
But Tuttle said he doesn't know of any official tests done by plant managers that have figures to challenge what city officials say is coming from wastewater released by the plant.
As part of the initial agreement for a zoning permit, the brewery was given a six-month grace period to get a feel for the kind of levels the plant's wastewater would release into city sewers. The current elevated levels for what's called high strength waste are typical of a beer plant, said Johnston. But if the plant were to have to pay for elevated levels for those six months Johnston said the plant's bill would have been over $60,000.
When we receive higher strength wastewater we have to feed the treatment units with more oxygen, said Johnston. So our blower runs more, we have a higher energy bill, and we produce more solid residuals that we have to treat in our belt press.
Johnston, would not say when the city might start assessing the plant associated wastewater fees but said plant operators must submit some type of remediation plan to the city by September 30th. He said plant managers are well aware of city concerns and met with Brevard officials August fifth, three days after the dated letter.
Johnston told News 13, Oskar Blues wasn't delinquent on the $33,375 owed impact fees but must begin making payments in October.
The letter also says the wastewater temperature from the Brevard brewery is consistently exceeding 104 degrees and, at times, up to 140 degrees fahrenheit, which could cause city pipe failure costing close to $20,000.
The brewery opened in Brevard in December. Oskar Blues headquarters are based in Colorado. A company spokesperson said the Brevard plant has distributed 1.2 million cans of beer to 15 states up and down the East Coast.
Johnston said Brevard's wastewater plant had received six permit violations in April, May and June but was back in compliance in July. Johnston also said he doesn't know if the Oskar Blues elevated sewage water numbers are connected to the Brevard wastewater plant's elevated numbers since there was another issue of plant maintenance over the summer. But Johnston said the brewery's numbers continued to be cause for concern as they remained consistent into July and August, and that it was possible wastewater coming from the plant was a factor in plant water violations over the summer. He said the Brevard plant hasn't had any kind of permit violations since 1997*.*Jay Johnston corrected that information Wednesday to say that they have had other violations, mostly
characterized as minor, including a BOD violation in 2006.
by Kimberly King
Follow Kim on Twitter @KimKing ReportsClick here to read the letter from the City of Brevard.
In the Kitchen with David | October 9, 2019
| Hey Foodies! Watch David Venable whip up some of his favorite, easy-to-prepare recipes, gourmet recipes and comfort food recipes! Whether you want to lengthen your list of homemade recipes or simply brush up on your cooking skills, be sure to tune in to QVC's In the Kitchen with David every week.
Delight in discovering all of David Venable's great ideas for beverages, breakfast items, soups, salads, sandwiches, and desserts here:
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Watch Christian Bale Burn Rubber in ‘Ford v Ferrari’ | Anatomy of a Scene
How do you go about recreating a 24-hour auto race for a movie? If you’re the director James Mangold, meticulously.
His latest film, “Ford v Ferrari,” takes place in the mid-1960s as the Ford Motor Company is trying to come up with a car that can beat out Ferrari in the Le Mans auto race. The American executives bring on the car designer Carroll Shelby (Matt Damon) and the driver Ken Miles (Christian Bale) to aid in that task.
This scene takes place at the beginning of the 1966 edition of the race as Miles is preparing. Narrating the sequence, Mangold said that he wanted to use the camera following Miles down a hallway and then out to the track as a technique to reveal the spectacle of the race, with overwhelming crowds and a heightened energy.
The race starts the same way Le Mans used to actually begin, with the drivers standing across the track from their cars, then running over and leaping into the vehicles before pulling out. Mangold said the moment, captured in one shot, was a challenge to coordinate but was important to give a sense of authenticity to the scene.
He said he shot as much of the action as possible with real cars and stunt drivers, using visual effects not as much for the racing moments, but more to populate the stands so the production wouldn’t need 20,000 extras each day.
Read the “Ford v Ferrari” review.
Learn about the actual race recreated in the film.
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